|
The establishment of our church in Farnham owes much to the devotion
of two French priests, Father Mathieu Gerin and Fr Etienne Robo.
The first place of worship for Farnham Catholics since the Reformation
was the chapel at Frensham Place (now Edgeborough School) where
the Woodroffe family welcomed local Catholics at the Masses celebrated
by their chaplain, Fr Gerin, who had come to Farnham in 1888 to
escape anticlerical persecution in France.
Before long somewhere larger was needed and Fr Gerin purchased a
disused police station in Bear Lane. The upstairs was converted
into the church of St Polycarp the first Mass was said there on
St Polycarp's Day, January 26th 1890. Downstairs a school was set
up. It soon expanded and later a purpose built school was built
next door. In 1905 Fr Gerin was badly injured in a car accident
in the Borough and had to retire. He was succeeded by Fr Charles
Turner in 1907, followed by Fr Thomas McSweeney in 1909 and Fr Etienne
Robo in 1913.
During World War 1 many visitors, refugees and soldiers swelIed
the congregation. In 1917 Fr Robo was called up to serve in the
French army. He returned in 1919 and in 1922 in response to growing
numbers he decided to build a bigger church and call it after St
Joan of Arc who had been canonised in 1920. Cardinal Henry Beaufort
(1377- 1447) had been the moving spirit at the trial of Joan of
Arc. He had been present when she was burnt at the stake and her
ordered her ashes to be thrown into the Seine. Cardinal Beaufort
was a resident of Farnham -one of his principle residences was Farnham
Castle. It was fitting therefore, as an act of reparation, that
Farnham should be the place where a church was raised in her memory
.A building fund was set up, and in l923 land was purchased on the
present site in Tilford Road. It was part field, part disused gravel
pit which had become the town's rubbish dump, It took several years
to level and it was not until 1928 that plans were drawn up, the
choice of patron - St Joan of Arc approved and permission to go
ahead given by the Bishop.
That same year Father Robo and a small band of helpers had organised
a large-scale celebration in Farnham to mark the 8th centenary of
the foundation of Waverley abbey by the Cistercians. The intention
was to remind the public of the part the Catholic Church played
in English life before the Reformation, but also to make local Catholics
take heart, as they were small in number and isolated. No doubt
it also helped gain support for the development plans for the local
church. Cardinal Bourne, Bishop William Brown, eight abbots, 200
clergy, and 5,000 attended the Mass, which was sung in the ruins
of the Abbey church.
Plans for the new church were drawn up by its architect and benefactor,
Col. J. E. Dixon Spain FRIBA. On May 23rd 1929 the foundation stone
was laid and one year later on the feast of St Joan, on May 30th
1930, the new church was opened. Two years later the Bishop of Southwark
upgraded the church from being a mission centre, giving it formal
parish status.
In 1935 the first Farnham born priest since the Reformation sang
his first Mass at St Joan's - the newly ordained Rev. Patrick Smyth,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Smyth of East Street. The second was the Rev.
Charles V. Borelli, ordained in 1939.
|